Suppose
is a finite extension of fields, and that
and
are valuations on
and
, respectively.
Uniqueness. View as a
finite-dimensional vector space over
. Then
is a norm in
the sense defined earlier (Definition 18.1.1). Hence any two
extensions
and
of
are equivalent
as norms, so induce the same topology on
. But as we have
seen (Proposition 16.1.4), two valuations which induce the same topology are
equivalent valuations, i.e.,
, for some
positive real
. Finally
since
for all
.
Existence. We do not give a proof of
existence in the general case. Instead we give a proof, which was
suggested by Dr. Geyer at the conference out of which
[Cas67] arose. It is valid when is locally
compact, which is the only case we will use later.
We see at once that the function defined in (19.1.1)
satisfies the condition (i) that
with equality only
for
, and (ii)
for all
. The difficult part of the proof is to show that there is a
constant
such that
Choose a basis
for
over
. Let
be the max norm on
, so for
with
we have
With respect to the
-topology,
has the product topology
as a product of copies of
. The
function
is a composition of continuous functions on
with respect to this topology (e.g.,
is the determinant, hence
polynomial),
hence
defines nonzero continuous function on the compact set
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> K<a> := NumberField(x^2-2); > K; Number Field with defining polynomial x^2 - 2 over the Rational Field > function norm(x) return Sqrt(2^(-Valuation(Norm(x),2))); end function; > norm(1+a); 1.0000000000000000000000000000 > norm(1+a+1); 0.70710678118654752440084436209 > z := 3+2*a; > norm(z); 1.0000000000000000000000000000 > norm(z+1); 0.353553390593273762200422181049
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I don't believe this
proof, which I copied from Cassels's article. My problem with it is
that the proof of Theorem 19.1.2 does not give that
, i.e., that the triangle inequality holds for
. By
changing the basis for
one can make any nonzero vector
have
, so if we choose
such that
is very large,
then the
in the proof will also be very large. One way to fix
the corollary is to only claim that there are positive
constants
such that
When is no longer complete under
the position is more complicated:
It remains to show that the
are distinct and that they
are the only extensions of
to
.
Suppose
is any valuation of
that extends
. Then
extends by continuity to a real-valued function on
,
which we also denote by
. (We are again using that
is dense
in
.) By continuity we have for all
,
We consider the restriction of
to one of the
. If
for some
, then
for every
in
so
. Hence either
is identically
0 on
or it induces a valuation on
.
Further,
cannot induce a valuation on two of the
. For
It remains only to show that (19.1.2) is a topological homomorphism. For
William Stein 2004-05-06